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Marcovicci was born in Manhattan, New York City to Helen Stuart, a singer, and Eugen Marcovicci, a physician and internist of Romanian descent.[2][3] Her father was 63 when she was born and died when she was 20.[4] In her teens she decided that she wanted to be a singer, but instead majored in drama.[5] In a 1972 interview, she looked back at this period without enthusiasm:

"I found that people interested in theater were very serious and heavy. It was a very inbred group. I could not be a part of that. So, if I was going to be an actress, I would have to sing my way into it. I guess what I didn't like about theater on the academic level was the feeling of always being defeated. How could any 18-year-old girl be expected to play Amanda in The Glass Menagerie? You just couldn't be successful at what you were doing. And although I might not have then been able to articulate this, I must have sensed it at the time."[5]

In 2008 Marcovicci celebrated her 22nd season at the legendary Oak Room of the Algonquin Hotel with Marcovicci Sings Movies II. A very special 60th Birthday concert followed in May 2009 at Town Hall in NYC, celebrating Andrea’s contribution to the American Songbook. To commemorate this event her personal record label, Andreasong Recordings, Inc., released a compilation CD titled As Time Goes By: The Best of Andrea Marcovicci, her 17th album and/or CD.

At the end of 2011, Marcovicci celebrated her 25th season at the Oak Room with "No Strings," a collection of songs about travel. Her closing performance of "No Strings" was the final cabaret event at the Oak Room, as the Algonquin's new owner decided to turn the space into a lounge for "preferred" customers.[6]

On Monday evening, November 18th, 2013 (her actual 65th birthday), Joe's Pub, part of the Public Theater, was the site of two performances (7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.) of Marcovicci's latest themed show, "Moonlight Cocktail." As usual, her longtime musical director, Shelly Markham, accompanied the perpetually glamorous singer on piano and Jered Egan again contributed on bass.

She is the recipient of several awards and honors including the Mabel Mercer Foundation’s 2007 Mabel Award and three Lifetime Achievement Awards--honored by the Manhattan Association of Cabarets and Clubs, the Licia Albanese-Puccini Foundation, and by a Bob Harrington Backstage Bistro Award. In recognition of her accomplishments in the arts, Andrea has received honorary degrees from Trinity College in Hartford, CT and the Memphis College of Art. In addition, “The Andrea Marcovicci Suite” at the Algonquin Hotel, dedicated in 2006 on her twentieth anniversary at the Oak Room, contains memorabilia of her work in theatre, film, television, and on the concert stage.